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Rogge's hopes for Youth Olympics

Published:Thursday | August 12, 2010 | 12:00 AM
Rogge

GENEVA (AP):

International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge hopes the inaugural Youth Olympic Games will teach young athletes to embrace fair play and reject doping, racism and corruption.

Rogge will declare the inaugural games open in Singapore on Saturday, fulfilling his long-time wish to create a global, multi-sport event for young athletes.

"It's a preparation for their later Olympic life," Rogge told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "In a very modern and human way, we are going to tell them things that are important that they have to acquire. I think that is the added value of the Youth Olympic Games."

The event will feature around 3,600 athletes aged 14-18 and representing more than 200 nations, competing in the same 26 sports on the current Summer Olympics programme.

Rogge said the athletes' village will double up as a giant classroom for the August 14-26 games.

"I believe I can say we are experts in staging major sports events," Rogge said. "But we are entering now a new field, the education field. We might make some errors in the beginning but we will learn from them."

The IOC has sought to learn from groups such as the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides movements, schools, child experts in the academic world, and United Nations agencies.

Star presence

Athletes also will receive advice on diet and warm-up and training techniques to prevent injuries.

Yelena Isinbayeva, the Russian pole vault world-record holder and Olympic champion, will be the star presence in Singapore, supported by athletes from all 26 sports leading workshops.

Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps have also featured in pre-games publicity, promoted through a dedicated YouTube channel and social networking sites Facebook and Twitter.